University of South Carolina Libraries
* • V Jarnwcl I. HOLMES, HUNDRED HAVE CLOSE CALL WHEN HOTEL-BURNED. ftAftfitST '¥• *, COil SEA Th* ^■Hpi :Ar»ni Eotlro Oromsd Floor is Abtaae When Flamrs Ar« DlscorereS — None Hart SerkMuljr In Jumpins. A dispatch from Edgemere, Long Island, says In a lire which destroyed the Holmeshnrst Inn there before A^n|ia Monday Morning eeventy- ftre guaati and twenty employe«r ex perlenced exciting and narrow ex capes. - ThW-Are, which lh«. proprietor sold, was of Incendiary origin, start up through the frame structure so rap- AWFUL'DISEASE Pefafn ii Spredaf Rapitfl the S««di ui West. Tkro«gii NEW MENACE TO AMERICA the folIowlWf-detalls ^qiaander Peary's Journey firhafy that the entire first door was BcH— l hr the North Pole have been gleaned .Irpai members of the expedition on board the ateamer Roosevelt: The only men to reach the Pole were Commander Peary and one Eskimo. Eglng Wah, by name. The other white members of the rarlous parties that left Capt Columbia were oent book one by one as Mr. red 17 drew nearer dally to his ob ject. Mathew Henson, Mr. Peary's negro attendant, and three Eskimos the only other members of the reduc ed party that made the Anal dash Were left on the march south of the Pole. At *5.38 the party consisted of Mr. Peary, Capt. Bartlett. Matthew Henson, a negro man, who has been Mr. Peary's personal assistant on so moiy of his expeditions, the Kakl mos, seven sledges and sixty dogs and the Journey north was resumed The Ice was perfectly level as far as the eye could see. Capt. Bartlett took the observe tion on the 88th parallel on April 8, and then reluctantly returned leaving Mr. Peary. Henson and the Eskimos with provisions for forty dayi to make the final dash to the Pole. This reduced" party started on April 3. The men walked that day for ten hours and made twenty mtleo. Then they slept near the |»th parallel. The Pole was reach ed on April «. Md a series of obter vatlons were tkken at 80. Mr. Peary deposited his records the American flag. The temperature was 32 degrees below ■ero. . The Pole appeared as a frosen sea. Mr. Peary tried to take sound ings, but got no bottom at 1,500 fathoms. Mr. Peary stayed at the Pole for thirty-four hours and then ■Carted on his return Journey on April T. Han't Dr. Cook's Records. A dispatch from New York says the following wireless and cabls message has been received In that city: “Battle Harbor, Labrador, via Cape Ray, N. F., September 12. “I have no knowledge of Dr. Cook’s having given Mr. Whitney any records. There are no Cook records on the Roosevelt. (Signed) “Peary." In. Copenhagen, Dr. Frederick A. Cook declared that he had given to Harry Whitney, the wealthy young big gams hunter, part of the records of his observations on his return from the North Pole to Etah, Green land. Dr. Cook asserted that Mr. 'Whitney would bring the (records to this country. Commander Robert E. Peary on hl« return from the Pole, a year subsequent to that of Dr. Cook, picked up Mr. Whitney at Etah, and was bringing him south on the Rooaevelt when they met the relief ship Jeannle, to which Mr. Whitney transferred to continue bis for a few weeks in Baffin s It «rns-confidentally expected by Cook’s supporteri here that Mr. t> Records D1 ablase before the guests were given the alarm. While most of the guests were able to leave by stairways, half a doses, among them two women, leap ed from a second-story balcony, but were not seriously hurt. The guests were cared for In neighboring cottages. The hotel building was valued at 875,000. William Holmes, son of the owner, ran to his mother's room on the second floor and found his escape cut off by a wall of flames. They were forced to Jump, but were not hurt. An elevator boy ran his car until the flames stopped the car. METHOD TO MARKET CROP. New Orleans Cotton New Plan. Dealer Has A dispatch from New Orleans says W. B. Thompson, president of the New Orleans cotton exchange and head of the cotton Arm of W. B Thompt-on A Co., of that city, has Issued a circular letter to farmers, wherein he offers a new plan for the marketing of the cotton crop. He urges farmers to market their crops at the rate of 10 per cent month. According to Mr. Thompson this would create a stable market for both buyer and seller. Mr. Thompson says In part: “Let the producer of cotton mar ket 10 per cent of his crop each month for 10 months. An instant of reflection will convince any thoughtful man that whether the crop on the market be large or small and whether a hundred planters or a hundred thousand employ the method, the result will be better than If the crop were sold at once or the attempt made to hold It all If the plan Is good for one planter, It la good for ail, and if ail or any great number of planters adopt it. the problem of marketing the crop is oolved." WANTS MIA NECK BROKEN. A White Fired Attacks Negro Girl Twice. a Young A special to The News and Courier from Spartanbdrg says an unknown white man attempted to make a criminal assault on a young colored girl at East Spartanburg Saturday afternoon. He was caught by the father of the girl and given a severe whipping and then released and told to leave the country. It is said that this Is the second at tempt of the kind by the man, and the white people of the community regret that the girl's father let him get away, claiming that he should have been turned over .„to the au- thorttiea. The arsault caused the report to be circulated In the city that a race riot was on, and the deputy sheriff and a largg crowd of cttlsens hurried out to East Spartan burg to prevent trouble. By CITY MARSHALL KILLED a Bhm '(•Tool Urge^Tses-ioi.s, In ... Whore the crop whs worth cute • 1 If IliaiijA UUU *vli tvss a 0 alleging cruelty. MedkAl Science Is Working to Dis cover the Secret of the Terrible ~ Plague That Has Invaded the United States and WHIrti Is Caus ed by Eating Corn. Appearance In the United States of that mysterious disease, r pellagra, practically a new and hitherto un familiar kind of leprosy, and which, though Introduced but recently, Is spreading with great rapidity, may well excite alarm, says Rene Bache la the New York American. It is a disease,among the most frightful known to mankind—which already claims about one million victims, now surviving, in the Old World. Over there It pursues, In nearly all lut-tances, a slow course, killing the sufferers very gradually. But in this country It becomes unique and Is often a swift destroyer, the symptoms being "telescoped," as one might fay, so that the whole course of the malady may be run within 1 few weeks, terminating in death. To call it a “new brand of lepro sy" Is by no means inappropriate. Bift, In truth, it Is worse—much worse. Not only does it transform the skin of the body in to a yellow and parchment-like, covering, crack ed and bo*«t with foul and ulcerous sores, but It directly assails the tern pie of the mind, reducing the patient to a condition of Insanity or idiocy Until recently the disease, itf name compounded from two Italian words, “pelle," skin, and “agra,' rough—has been regarded as pe culiar to the Old Worldj, though a few sporadlo cases of It have ap peared from time to time In Mexico and South America. Suddenly and unexpectedly It Invaded the United States—the first sickness of the glnd being reported only a few years ago In Georgia. Now quite as sud denly Lt has spread throughout most of the Southern States and, worse still, because. of the difference in climate, it has attacked the Middle West. Fifty cases have been found at the Peoria, Illinois, State Hospital alone, and Captain Joseph F. Siler of the Army Medical Corps, sent there to investigate, has reported to the government that he believes the malady has long prevaHed, not only around Peoria, but throughout Illinois and the great corn growing Bates of the West. , For it is In corn that the cause of the disease, whatever It may be, lurks. The malady is neither contagious nor Infectious. That Is to say, one person cannot “catch It” or “take it” from another. Each individual rase originates from the moldy corn direct. In all likelihood, the mls- chlef-maklng fungus starts its work in the cornfield, where its spones fall upon the ripening ears and grow. But even this is not a certainty. It may l>e asked, why does not cooking kill the fungus germs? So In all likelihood It does. But the poison manufactured by the fungus Is what makes the trouble, and ap parently this Is not deprived of its toxic efficiency by high temperatures. That boiling does not render It harm less is shown by the fact, already mentioned, that alcohol distilled from spoiled maize will cause the disease. The spores ^ V. colonies in tfcrr p Family at Five ia Found in Exha lift ed Condition. ., That the family of five loat on the Imperial county desert has been sav ed la the assuring news brought r t» Bon Bernardino, Cal., by Leonard Phelpa, who says the family waa rescued last Tuesday evening, hav- taf reached the Robert Gale's home- Mead Ml the edge of the imperial deaart. In an''exhausted condition. Within *00 yards of the Gale home the loet man and his family took aha!tar in n cave. Seeing Gale, the mmn waved his hand and then sank upon the ground too exhausted to .tramp to the cabin. Gale rushed to 4 hit aid, learned of the woman and >-ahtldten Ih the cave and took them to fcja home. Would Have U> Teach. 1 well-to-do old fnrmer, whose aa nn Applicant for c position [Ahd toremmant. hot had been ■Hifeira, Mid: “Well, Iffif Bart DHfeJb«t John haa missed that cjvll service examination again. ■If Ilk# they Itit won’t hav# ho wo*, short on opolRh’ xn’ ■■■■■ftpurty-fur In “What is he going “l dunno. Times A MODEL HUSBAND. What His Good Wife Says About His Good Qualities. Samuel \V. Van Noatran, who waa adjudged the “model husband" at the second annual “hubby show, held at the home of Mra. James Sidney McCullough, of Chicago, has received from his wife credit for being the possessor of all the vir tues necesdary to make an ideal mate. "Other than possessing the almost super-husband quality of being good- natured before breakfast.” said Mrs. Van Nostran, “my husband allows me to carry the family pocketbook and declares, just as If be meant It, that my cooking is so far above ‘other’s’ efforts In the culinary line that there could be no compromise. If that Is not glory enough for one woman, I would like to know what yxw-•» ■■■- - -—V I—.him, ,1 ^ “ lL ‘.41 | The oomplata list t>f desirable qualities attributed to her husband by Mrs. Van Nostran afs: Prompt at meals, good entartslner. and adept with the chafing dish, good judge of feminine beauty, generous and kind-hearted, 'enjoys home -more than the club, happiest when among fries do. '* lit.'Von Nostran. ♦bo also receiv ed the prise for bis almost womanly runs as n.k-iViai^'jCik'appolnt- aupreme court librarian, which place be filled to the day of his death with fidelity. He enjoyed the friendship and confidence of the su pretne court Justicee for whom he entertained the highest regard. Dur ing hla Incumbency of the position of librarian Mr. Reynolds wa« fre quently retained by lawyers from all parts of the State to assist them before the supreme court and well did he perform his part and con tribute to the success of the cases In which he was engaged. “Reference should be made to Mr. Reynolds' career during the Confed eracy. Too young to enter the Con federate army he nevertheless saw service In the field when the corps of Arsenal cadets under Col. John P. Thomas retired from Columbia be fore Sherman with the rest of Hamp ton's army. Owing to his service on this occasion, be became a loyal member of Camp Hampton of Con federate veterans. Early In life Mr. Reynolds was happily married, bis wife having been Mias Sue Edwards, who survives him with several chil dren. Reynolds srow no ordinary map. An active, useful career as teoober. Journalist And) towyer is ended. Peace to hla ftftbes." BIG LO06 FROM COTTON SEED. Reports on the n* I reckon te ll __ ^IMCklnt retool ",-” % •oir on a button la thirty- five years old sad rted bins mm Aathronoee The report of Botantot Barre, of CtwmsoQ. to Oommisoiooor Watson on the anthrsnooo disease In cotton seed shows that tbs 8UU is losing $5,000,000 annually, and Georgia $14,500,000 and that the disease 1* spreading. The remedy Is to pick small local x mills, tbs grain for which woe "shocked" by hand. For this reason none of It was moldy; and consequently the flour made from It was wholesome, containing no disease germs. Those who ste It were safe from “pellagra.” Today, however, there Is a very different state of affairs. The South has given up growing corn on any extensive scale, and Is planting cot ton instead. But the people of that section are still eating as much corn meal as ever, obtaining the product from the North, where It Is made In great mills In Chicago, St. Louis, Cincinnati and other cities, by ma chinery. The ears are “shucked'' by machinery, which pays no atten tion to bad opes, and throws the moldy grain In with the rest, to W afterwards ground. -Formerly the eoxn -used...^!; mak ing meal la the South was never kept in big bulks. Todajy, on the other hand, it Is customarily handled In enormous bulks—-600 bushels to a car, and thousands of bushels in one bin. Under such conditions, es pecially If any moisture be present, the mass is liable to “heat," and the fungus from the moldy grain spreads with great rapidity. Thus Is may be taken for granted that the cornmeal which comes to market nowadays is more or less liable to be Infected with fungus. No wonder then, that la the States where corn- meal Is a large Item of the daily diet a disease positively known to arise from the eating of moldy corn should have made Its appearance. It Is by no means to be supposed that the fug! which attack corn are all of them, nr even most of them, dangerous. Presumably, they are as a rule, quite harmless. But among them there must be some species of a "pathogenic” Character which produces the disease known as pellagra. When sufferers from the malady in its early stages are deprived of corn, and fed on other grain, the symptoms disappear. Summed up, the symptoms com prise progressive emaciation, brittle ness of the bones, fatty degeneration ef the Internal prgans (especially the heart, liver, kidneys, spleen and lungs). Inflammation of the brain and spinal cord, nervous troubles and the frightful affection of the skin already mentioned. These conditions become progres sively worse. There are evidences of mental weakness, with great depres sion of spirit. Children are sad of face and look like old men or wo men. Young women rapidly take on the aspect of ancients. Emaciation sets In, with increased physical weakness. The skin becomes red with sensations of burning and Itch ing. and usually some puffinees Blisters appear, scattered over the surface; the spidermls dries and falls in grayish scales. I^ter on th> skin becomes thickened and of a dir tv yellow or yellowish-green color hard and rough, with painful crackr and crusts, or even ulcerations -| Finally, it becomes parchment-llke with entire loss of elastictly. The condition, In a word, ao far as this feature of the complaint Is concerned, is what a layman would describe as leprous It Is not lepro sy. however. A suggestion has been made to the effect that the leprosy described in the Bible was actually pellagra, but there is no reason for such a theory. Undoubtedly pe'ln- gra t* a modern disease, corn having been unknown in ancient times. Maize, of course, is of American origin, and It Is safe to say that the Indians, who were large users of corn meal long before the days of Columbus did not use moldy grain in Its manufacture. In the later stages of the malady, sufferers become either partly Im becile or deranged. Sometjrpes they entertain delusip^ of per( )t Vitlon or of religion. VF l^holeV, (I- s )n dyner* l a, and) Notary Public, T wean VhS ‘reaclfl*8^r er Congre* - 1K - W. H. w«t>m origin d from several that year, and he stalk of this par ticular kind. He will know definite ly by next fall If th« discovery is of os great a value as the experts st Clemson College think It is. 6 GOODS SEIZED | Southern States Supply Company 'exry’* Boatswain Confirm Cook’s State ment of tbe Lootinf of His Stores. PEARY BADLY EQUIPPED IH*. Cook's and Franke's Collection of Relics Were Taken by Peary— Admiral Schley Endorses Dr. Cook as Does Capt. Osborn, Secretory of the Artie Club. A, dispatch. fr:aoi._SU J ohn'a, N. F., ►Odl Ma< Plu, COLUMBIA. 3. C. PELLAGRA DISEASE CLASSIFIED COLUMN SAID TO BE CAUSED BY THE USE OF WESTERN GROWN CORN , It ia Claimed That This Corn Han also Sebright's. Athens, Go. ▼trtotto* Carllxla Oobh, says Alan Whitten, who was T)6arq ~]Vot Time to Matnrc Well Befean- swaln of the Peary auxi&liary steam- Forma lor goto itO oeroa iTmllM: from Columbia. Aik for parttc-— ulara and Bat R. E. Prince, Raleigh, N. C. er Erik in 1905 and again in 1908, adds his quota to the polar contro versy. On his expeditions he saw much of Peary and knew of Peary's plaas. He was also on the Erik In the summer of 1907 when she lay for a week In Sydney alongside the schooned Jno. R. Bradley, in which Dr. Cook was starting for the pole. Whitten says that.,lhe Bradley was abundantly equipped for Cook's ex pedition, having supplies for at least three years. He confirms the charges made by Dr. Cook at Copenhagen that Peary's people took Dr. Cook's provisions, adding that not only did the crew of the ship take Cook's stores at £tah, but that boats were sent to Annatok, thirty miles distant, to remove Cook's provisions which were stored there. Whitten admitted however that he did not know If this removal was by arrangement between Franke, who was left in charge of the provisions and Peary or Peary's representatives. The boatswain also made the statement that both Franke's and Cook's collections of ivory and skins, some of them very valuable, likewise wore taken. He said that the trou ble with Peary's previous expeditions had been the lack of supplies. In stead of remaining away for three years, Commander Peary was com pelled to return after about fifteen months, the real reason, Whitten de clared, that he did not have enough supplies to remain longer. Naval Officers Endorse Cook. A dispatch from New York says previous assumption that Comman der Peary would have the United States Navy solidly behind him was not borne out In a letter from Rear Admiral Schley, made public by Capt. R. S. Osborn, secretary of the Artie Club of America, of which Dr. Cook Is a member. The letter under date of September 11 from Pocono Manor, Pa., runs in part as follows: “I like Cook's attitude immensely in this unfortunate, unnecessary and unwise controversy. He certainly has been dignified and manly in the stand he has taken in this matter. Capt. Osborn followed up his let ter from the admiral with a lecture on "Who Discovered the North Pole?” “Dr. Frederick A. Cook,” he said, “was for two years my wife’s phy sician. I saw him two or three times a week and we chatted many hours. If 1 have ever known a man of integrity, probity, sincerity and modesty, it is Cook “I have known also the other man — known him To depart from truth by large margins.” It is now admitted by Peary him self, that only one Esquino was at the pole with him. Cook had three with him. it is Ground. The dread new disease which first made its appearance In the South several years ago, has Invaded sev eral parts of the North. Fifty cas es are now under treatment in Pe oria. ill. It has probably existed undetected In the North many years. Dr. Lavlndar of the United States A good worm powder for hortM and mulea. Safa and effeetlvo. Sent postpaid ox receipt of 35e. T. R. Wannamaker, Cheraw, 8. 0. ~ ■ . ■ Foii-vlew House, Clyde, N. O.—Fine ▼lew, good water, good table. Rates |6 and up per week. Ne consumptive*. Dr. F- M. Darie. r marine hospital service, has proved ' For Sale, cheap—One 31-2 h. p. Killed by Lightning. The Sumter Watchman and South ron says: “Simon Mickens apd anot that pellagra caused the death of two patients who were supposed to have been scalded to death in the Bartonvllle, Illinois, insane asylum In 1904 and 1907. They died in bath tubs and their bodies looked like they had been boiled and the nurse who was In charge of the last case was dismissed for supposed criminal carelessness. Dr. laivlndar says the appearance of being boiled alive Is typical of the Usease of pellagra and that death in the bath tubs was a mere concl- dence. The result is that the nur^e has been reinstated. Dr. Lavlndar found forty cases in this asylum on his arrival there. The Knoxville Sentinel, referring to the theory that mmty corn causes pellagra, expressed the belief some time ago that the spread of the dis ease was due to the use of care lessly selected corn ground by steam rolling mills instead of the coarse ground corn meal of water mills of the South. The view has been grow ing In strength. Dr. William T. Woodley, of Charlotte, N. C., has written The Observer on this sub ject. He blames the use of shock cured corn which, he says, is not given time enough to dry thorough ly before It is husked and market ed. He says that sixty days longer should be allowed to corn in the. shock than to corn standing in the field. The season in the West is mtkh shorter than in the South and the farmers push their work so as to get through with cleaning Ithelr fields before winter. Dr. Woodley proposes, therefore, that mills be, required to use only corn that has been cured under supervision. Corn , for the table should be cured with-1 out stripping the fodder in order to I give the ears all the nutriment pos sible. The amount of corn ground for human food Is small compared with the total grown and It would be no great hardship to require the mills to be careful in selecting It. 1 In commenting on the rapid spread of the disease, the Farmers' Union Sun says here in the South, whose people have always been ad dicted to the use of corn-bread In Erie Motar Cycle, 1909 model. For particulars write B No. 1, R. F. D. No. 6, Honea Path, 8. C. Wedding Invitations and annonaan- ments. Finest quality. Correal styles. Samples free. James H. DeLooff, Dept. 6. Grand Raplda, Mich. Post Cards—We will send you 10 beautiful post cards for only ten cents or ten tinseled in gold fisr 15 cents. Send two cent stamp for sample. The Anspooner do.. Dept. E., 6249 Elizabeth street, Chicago. A Rare Chance for lovers of the ar* tistlc. We have a limited number of pictures, reproduced from fa mous paintings, mounted and suit able for home decoration. Six for fifty cents, postpaid. Dela ware ' s’ley Printing Company Dep t L, Deposit, N Y. Make Yonr Own Will—Wlthont aid of a lawyer. You don't noed one. A will is necessary to protyet your family and relatives. Foma and book of Instruction, any Stata, one dollars. Send for free lltnia- ture telling you all about It. Mof fetts’ Will Forma. Dept. 40, Broadway, Brooklyn, New York City. WOOD, mow AND STUB LosnAaDcJSJrwrY^aJSJfrA. ga. / This being our tweaty-flfth yXot of uninterrupted success, w* wlsg R to be our “Banner year.** Our thousands of satisfied ea* tomert, and fair dealing, la bring ing us new customers dally. If you are contemplating tha pajv chase of a piano or organ, writs ,ea at once for catalagues, and for ow special proposition. « v ‘' MALONE’S music house, Columbia, 8. O, *■ some form or other, pellagra was i — ■■■— 11 unknown until comparatively recent ^ A collector for the Central at years. Before the war and long Georgia Railway Company was ftrd afterwards, we never knew or heard an< ^ worn out. Felt wretchedly ^nd of a case that indicated any of the un *l f° r work. Two iKJttles 'of, llagra. It Is as now Johnson s Tonic made him gain ,20 ribed a very modern pounds in 60 days Are you under as it relates to the wp l*ht? Get Johnson's Tonle Xm} symptoms of known and deJ ther negro man Afreet 1,m of** -bo were enM-*' ¥ f,>r ,hr Burn we 11 County” ( Acts ({erferaT^ Jssrinblv BktM PHjre JO;?,) we will it 01 ^disease so far 1 *£, and Its Tesscri * uW(S tt He hsd different sourcl noticed only in the tov\ n »ni the lit* mired o the use Resent prevalence, If us * >*■ Icorn, may be at-1 It does the work. .the South's aban- our people to go back to first princi ples. in other words, force them to 1 •♦-. Western corn and raise their bougl Now Society Fad. The latest fad In society is the tub cure In this the patient arises Just as the crisp air of the morn ing ia mellowed by the first sun beam. An ordinary washtub Is then filled with hot water and soap suds, Into which various articles of linen are thrown. After they are thor oughly saturated the patient takes them up oue at a time and rubs them briskly up and down on a washboard placed In the tub. TJils is kept up until the hands, arms and face are a glowing pink. The patient then goes into the open air and bangs all the linen articles on a line stretched for that purpose. The one completing tho task first an nounces the time to others over the telephone, and Is entitled to a prize. It is exciting sport and also Invigo rating exercise. * mrn -- I—./ 1 1.1 utiiimmm-m - CAN TUBERCULOSIS BE CURED? out tha food m«4 and plant only 1 Two doctor*, after careful axamlni) threrereff-M bo cotton crop the 1 Hons, have pronounced me fully rx xnder JV^fasloner Wxt- j eovhred. _ According to Statement Issued by the Michigan Department of Health, It Can B« Cured and Pre vented. I. tha undersigned, hereby certi fy that I have suffered slightly for severs! years, and endured paint xn spitting of blood from tuberculosi for thx pxtt year. Having taken th Saxatamoineh Remedy, for three months. I foel myself perfectly well A Bargain —One 6-room bouee on 3-acre lot, barn and outbuildings: good water and orchard, also one store house and lot. st >re 22x10, beet stand in town. The above dwelling and store for f 1.350. Also store fixtures and a small Block of shoes and dry goods with a good established trade will sell also. Everything new and in a good town for a cash business. No better opening In South Caro lina for a good business man than in Troy as it is in the heart of a good farming country. Only has 8 stores, bank and oil mill. Good reason for selling. Call or write P. R. Grady, Troy, 8. C. G«*t Rich Quick. Through the generosity of a broth er, a rich mine owner, Dr. E. B. Morgan, ear and eye specialist of Paterson, N. J., with a modest In come, has become the possessor of $1,000,000. Recently the brother, Dr. John Morgan, of Boston, realiz ed $7,000,000 through the sale of some securities, ajid, desiring bis brother to share his good fortune, gave him * mUto*. . Ton, tnt Brooms are doubling in price be cause of failure of the corn brush crop. The political bosses have al ways said these clean sweeping now brooms were going to be costly. man grabbed both the legs and gave a Jerk forward. Right through the window came the body, and as It struck the floor the watchman pin ioned both arms over Us head. A wild shriek rang out. It was a high treble voice. “It's a woman'" gasped the watch man. The two robbers outside took to their heels and disappeared In the darkness. The watchman dragged the pris oner to the light, tied her hands and raised an alarm. The prisoner was recognized as Mrs. Fred Lthd. despite her disguise. This consisted of top boots, trousers, a shirt, cost and hat, giving her all the appearance of a man. These articles proved to be her husband’s clothing, which she had altered fit herself. The boots were her hus band's, and, while much too large for her, she had wrapped her feet In cloths to make them steady. When first placed in jail Mrs. Lind still wore the disguise which made her appearance that of a man, but later sbe appeared In court dressed as a woman. However, *h“ ••t -. Cl od ones If you wlslT of these organs, f gains don’t last long' Write for illustration! these organs and for terms. MALONE’S MUSIC HOUSE Columbia, 8. C. oc; • • WOOD, IRON AMO STSKL LOMBAaooSleAKvf >a)Sat%-A. ga. WRITE US If you are a Fall Grain Sower to Fall Vetch Sower Fall Peach Orchard Sprayer! Our “Weekly Curent Price List, and our various Pamphlets on above will greatly help you. Twill cost nothing. Do It today. N. L *lLLEf SEED CO. AUGUSTA, GA. THX PLACE TO BUY YOUB Machfcw? Tools do not sm what you i n you done wme M We tfi. Everything in •uppiiex Cotanfek (Signed) —i— —- For tootlmoolals and tdrms. wrU Remedy Co.,. L. It Pownr. It D.. In charts. •n- ■ % •«»)«• WM It was In this very cotta go In Brookslde, 15 miles rent Birmingham, Ala., that three Italians nearly a been sick 3 months. John- qulcldy—read letter below: BrooksM*, Ala* May 4, IMB. of cooUsued Malarial Pevsr. AO Sap storx The** cases war* of thre* to 104. TXo doctor* had tried svery- *• Toole. I romovod all the prtot- aaa retular praserlptfon. Tbeef- ptdty and there KB.) dMMLL A ravn TONIC Oft., iiwie ■ ■ mtoi